6th October, 2022 marks the date that our sailor finally came home. On this day the vessel that symbolises long awaited national recognition for Tom Crean, RV Tom Crean moored in Dingle, County Kerry, the beautiful port town close to where he was born. It’s a place Crean frequented often...
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Under the auspices of the Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine, Ireland finally provided recognition for Tom Crean in the shape of a scientific research vessel, named RV Tom Crean. January 31st 2021 will go down in history as the day Ireland finally honoured Tom Crean and our 11-year...
After the Corinto incident, Tom Crean was re-assigned back for a second term of service aboard HMS Wild Swan on 1st October 1895. For a man whose fame was founded upon his expeditions to the freezing climes of Antarctica, this was a time Crean would be exposed on many occasions,...
On the 19th December 1894, 17-year-old Tom Crean, fresh out of a rigorous and strict training regime, walked up the gangway of HMS Wild Swan for his first seagoing assignment. Now classified as a Boy 1st Class, his journey would be a long one that took him to the Americas...
The years since Tom Crean’s retirement had not been kind to him yet 1924 was one that would bring about devastating losses from which true recovery would never be possible even for a man famed for overcoming difficulties and barriers.. The hardships Tom Crean overcame over the course of three...
On days when the mood took him, Crean would sit chatting with patrons for hours. His presence and the thrill of being in his good company must have been a draw for those stepping through the doors of the South Pole Inn. One insight into the humour and wit of...
In 1929, Tom Crean built upon the foundations of the existing licensed premises he’d operated since receiving his license to sell wines, beers, cider and spirits in 1917. It became the South Pole Inn, a two-storey building which today welcomes visitors from all over the world to the former home...
After a gruelling, energy-sapping, thirty-six hour trek over the perilous mountains of South Georgia, the heavily-bearded, raggedy, weather-beaten trio staggered into Stromness, where they encountered two young children, later revealed to be the daughters of the whaling station manager. The children immediately turned and fled as if they’d just happened...
On this day Crean, Shackleton, and Worsley set out on a desperate mission to reach civilisation and with it, they hoped, an opportunity to rescue their 25 colleagues, 22 of them stranded on Elephant Island. Ahead of them the crossing of South Georgia was a daunting task and for good...
Although the order to abandon Endurance was given by Shackleton on 27th October 1915, the ship sunk to her icy grave on the 21st November but not before all necessary supplies had been retrieved by the men who were now camping on the ice. Frequent forays back to Endurance, the...
On this day, the culmination of the greatest tale of rescue and survival one could ever imagine, was being played out on the Southern Ocean as the Chilean ship, Yelcho, approached Elephant Island, watched by the 22 men who’d undergone 126 days of unimaginable hardships and deprivation. Onboard the rescue...
On 9th April 1916, Crean took control of the Stancombe Wills on a perilous journey to Elephant Island. It was the smallest of the three lifeboats that were launched and was, subsequently, the most difficult to navigate. The task of skippering the smallest lifeboat had originally fell to Hubert Hudson...
On 17th April 1916, the three lifeboats that proved vital to the survival of the crew of Shackleton’s failed expedition to traverse Antarctica, reached the relative safety of Elephant Island. It would become home for 22 of the 28 men crew for the next four and a half months. Two...
After an offer had been received and accepted from the Uruguayan government to provide a trawler, Instituto De Pesca No.1, the second rescue attempt got underway on 17th June, a week after her arrival in the Falklands on 10th June. Again, within twenty miles of reaching the island, the trawler had...
On this day at Port Stanley in the Falkland Islands, after the first failed attempt to rescue the stranded men from Elephant Island, Tom Crean was met and greeted by a fellow Kerryman, Tralee-born Daniel John O’Sullivan, as he disembarked the whaler, the Southern Sky. The Southern Sky wasn’t able to...
The early years of Tom Crean’s life in Annascaul will have mirrored that of other children across Ireland. He attended the local Brackluin School in Annascaul which he would have walked to barefoot – shoes were a luxury for children from more affluent families. Children of tenant farmers like Tom...
The most iconic photos of Tom Crean are the two featured below The images, both taken by Frank Hurley early in 1915, tell stories of their own. Taken in his birth month of February, the image of Crean in his twin peaked hat depicts a man of determination, a tough,...
Shortly after his return from Endurance, Crean was specially promoted to Acting Boatswain on 27th December 1916 for his services on the TransAntarctic Expedition with Shackleton. Naval records confirm that, after the New Year, he was aboard the flagship of the North Atlantic cruiser fleet, HMS King Alfred, and left...
Tom Crean joined the crew of HMS Inflexible on 14th November 1918 shortly before she took part in escorting the German High Seas Fleet to surrender It was three days after the First World War armistice had been signed. This brought about a ceasefire and effectively ended the fighting. Crean,...
On the 23rd of January 1914, Tom Crean was assigned to HMS Enchantress, the Admiralty yacht often used by Winston Churchill. It would be his last naval posting before he would embark on his third expedition to Antarctica with Shackleton aboard SS Endurance. The luxury yacht was purchased by the...
On 5th September Tom Crean’s marriage to Ellen Herlihy, daughter of Patrick Herlihy, a former Annascaul publican, took place in Annascaul. Their wedding at the Church of the Sacred Heart in Annascaul, was well attended by family and friends and among the wedding gifts was a silver tea set sent...
Taken in February 1920, a month before Tom Crean retired, this image, unseen by the current generation until I rediscovered it in a news clipping and included it in the book, shows Tom Crean at the beginning of an eventful two months that began with his admission to hospital just...
Endurance left her berth at the West India Dock on 1st August 1914 and headed for Plymouth before sailing on to South America. Shackleton was at the helm and the Manchester Guardian reported that: “alongside the skipper and at the wheel was a hero – Petty Officer Crean, the man...
One of the most astonishing feats in history got underway this day when Ernest Shackleton, Tom Crean, Frank Worsley, Tim McCarthy, Harry McNish and John Vincent, set off in the adapted lifeboat, the James Caird, in an attempt to rescue their colleagues who can be seen below waving them off...
This image you see below is the last known photograph taken of Tom Crean. 80 years ago to this day, Ireland’s forgotten Hero passed away. In a sad twist of fate, when his own hour of need arrived, there was no one available with the life-saving skills he himself had...
On 19th February 1912, at 3:30am, an exhausted, shivering, lone figure entered Hut Point in Antarctica. After undertaking a solo trek through soft snow without skis in a journey he’d commenced the previous day, the man had just completed a 35-mile journey on meagre rations of two biscuits and a...
In 1914, Sir Ernest Shackleton had a rival for Tom Crean’s services as the leader of another proposed expedition to Antarctica had plans to commence at the same time as Shackleton’s Endurance expedition. Staking his claim for Crean, Joseph Foster Stackhouse, who’d announced his plans in October 1913, said: “One...
On 27th September 1919, Tom Crean was returning home from Russia on HMS Fox. It’s perhaps strange to think of Tom Crean in the Arctic after earning his reputation as an Antarctic veteran but the well-travelled Kerryman did indeed serve in the cold climes of the Northern Hemisphere. He is...
Tom Crean’s first documented case of life-saving heroics came when he navigated his way between ice floes jumping from one to another whilst surrounded by hungry Killer Whales before scaling mountain glaciers to rescue Apsley Cherry-Gerrard and Bowers, whilst on the Terra Nova expedition with Scott. When he and his...
In the years since returning from his first Antarctica Expedition aboard Discovery, Tom Crean was so valued by his commander, Robert Falcon Scott, that he accompanied his Captain on all of his seagoing Naval assignments between September 1906 and March 1909. On June 15th, 1910, he departed Cardiff aboard the...
On 11th November 1902, while serving on the Discovery Expedition, Tom Crean, part of a depot-laying group under the command of Lieutenant Michael Barne achieved the prized record of reaching ‘farthest south.” The sledging team passed the 78°50’S latitude previously reached by the Norwegian explorer, Carsten Borchgrevink, on 16th February...
On December 10th 1901, Tom Crean carried his holdall aboard RRS Discovery. It would become his first expedition to Antarctica under the leadership of Commander Robert Falcon Scott. He had, by this time, been demoted to the rating Able Seaman after a period that appeared to have been a miserable...
On February 15th 1900, serving as a Petty Officer 2nd Class, After a two-year period of training on his return from the South American Station, Crean’s term of service would be ledgered to HMS Ringarooma from February 15th 1900 although it appears he didn’t commence service on Ringarooma until over two months later. The...
On this day, 18 yr-old Tom Crean, who had travelled over 13,000 miles on his first seagoing assignment, was serving on HMS Royal Arthur. He had transferred to the flagship of the Pacific Fleet on 14th March 1895 from HMS Wild Swan and Crean was very likely to have been...
Tom Crean was almost 16 and a half years-old when he joined the Navy. Previous accounts of his life have given rise to the belief he was 15-years-old yet his baptismal and birth records prove this to be false. The assumption that he was 15 yrs old, was born out...
At Gortacurraun, a townland close to Annascaul, Catherine Crean, nee Courtney, gave birth to a child on, or shortly before, 16th February 1877. Church records reveal that the priest, who will have written up numerous church entries at the end of each month, would enter the wrong Christian name for...